Legal System of England and Wales (SQE1 only) Flashcards
Where are civil claims started?
- Started in the County or High Court
- CoA and SC only hear appeals
What are tribunals concerned with the interactions between?
State and individuals e.g. immigration, benefits
How many County Courts are there?
One - 173 ‘hearing centres’ spread across E+W
What are the separate divisions of a County Court?
There are none
What are District Registeries?
Various regional centres of the High Court
If a claim is commenced in the High Court, where must it commence?
- In London - Royal Courts of Justice (RCJ)
- Elsewhere - either RCJ or appropriate District Registry
What are the 3 divisions of the High Court?
- Chancery
- King’s Bench Division
- Family Division
Allocation based on convenience and matters of expertise only
What types of claim come under the ‘General KBD list’?
PI, professional negligence, breach of contract, non-payment of debt, breach of statutory duty etc.
What are the ‘Specialist Courts’ within the King’s Bench Division?
- Commercial Court (business disputes, financial matters, fraud, insurance)
- Circuit Commercial Courts (contracts, sale of goods)
- Tech + Construction Court (engineering, computers, environmental, public procurement)
- Admiralty Court
- Administrative Court (and planning court; PP, highway, rights of way)
- Planning Court
What lists come under the Chancery Division?
- Business List
- Insolvency and Companies List (shareholder disputes, director’s disqualification, prejudice petitions)
- Revenue List (taxation where HMRC party)
- Competition List
- Business List
- Property, Trusts and Probate List (landlord/tenant, administration of estates)
- Intellectual Property List
What are the ‘Business and Property Courts’?
- All Lists from Chancery Division and all from King’s Bench (bar Administrative and Planning)
- Done for PR (our judges are specialists)
What types of claims may overlap between Chancery and KBD?
- Contract
- Tort
- Commercial
- Bankruptcy
- Partnerships
- Company matters
What types of claims are exclusive to their division?
- Chancery = land, mortgage, trusts, administration of estates, probate, intellectual property
- KBD = admirality (shipping), judicial review, defamation, PI
What disputes will be heard by the ‘Financial List’?
Part of both courts
Hears financial disputes of £50m or more in value requiring particular judicial knowledge of financial markets
What are the 2 divisions of the Court of Appeal? Where is the court based?
- Civil and Criminal
- Court is based in RCJ in London but has occasional sittings elsewhere
What is the only time permission to appeal to the SC will be granted?
If the issue raised is of ‘general public importance’
Which judges are addressed as ‘My Lord’ or ‘My Lady’?
- Justices of Supreme Court
- Judges of CoA
- High Court Judges
Because it’s the highest form of address, it is used in the high courts and above
Which judges are addressed as ‘Judge’?
- High Court Masters
- District Judges
- Deputy District Judges
Which judges are addressed as ‘Your honour’?
- Circuit judges
- Recorders
You do laps in a racecar on-a(honour) circuit (judge)
To make a noise from it, you blow on-a(honour) recorder
What is the Lord Chief Justice the most senior member of? What do they do in PARL/GOV and what do they lead in?
- Most senior member of judiciary
- Represents views of judiciary of E+W to PARL and GOV and leads in deployment of judges across E+W
Who is Master of the Rolls?
President of Civil Division of Court of Appeal and judge of Court of Appeal - second in judicial importance to Lord Chief Justice
President of the Family Division, President of the QBD, and Chancellor of the High Court will all be what?
Member of the CoA
Where do solicitors have rights of audience?
I.e. can carry out advocacy
Magistrates’ Court, County Court, Tribunals and Appeal Tribunals
I.e. the lowest stage of both court systems + (appeal) tribunals because of how regular they are
Are solicitors authorised to carry out advocacy in the High Court and beyond for civil disputes?
No - this is carried out by barristers